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Sent: Sunday, December 02, 2001 9:10 PM
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[U.N. figures show that of the 1.8 million who were uprooted in the war, about 785,000 
have returned to their prewar homes. About 380,000 are abroad, leaving about 635,000 
people in Bosnia who are living in someone else's house and waiting to return to their 
own rightful homes. ABOUT HALF ARE SERBS, the United Nations says...The biggest hurdle 
is simply getting squatters to move out. Feraget, the U.N. refugees spokeswoman, said 
that if, for instance, the 24,000 Croatian Serbs in the republic would go back to 
Croatia, their homes could be reclaimed by the Muslims and Croats who own them.]

Thousands of Serbs Return Home
By ALEXANDAR S. DRAGICEVIC
.c The Associated Press

  
DZEVAR, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - It's freezing outside, but it warms Rade Kragulj's 
heart just to be able to fix the leaky roof on the house he left behind during 
Bosnia's war. 

At 62, after six years as a refugee, he is finally home, even if he is a Serb and his 
home is in territory now under Muslim control. 

With the return home of Kragulj and thousands of other Bosnian Serbs, U.N. officials 
feel they have turned a corner in efforts to undo the human tragedy of a 3 1/2-year 
war that uprooted 1.8 million people. 

``Finally this year, we're seeing real results for all of our work since 1996,'' said 
Aida Feraget, the U.N. refugee agency's Bosnia spokeswoman. 

Persuading Serbs, Muslims and Croats to return to the homes they abandoned during the 
war remains Bosnia's biggest challenge. 

Many feel they can never live together again because of the ethnic hatred stirred up 
in a war that killed at least 200,000 people. 

Bosnia is now under international administration, carved up into a Muslim-Croat 
federation and a Bosnian Serb republic. 

In some parts, nationalist politicians have obstructed the repatriation process with 
complicated bureaucracy. People who dared to return to territory no longer under their 
ethnic group's control have sometimes met a violent reception. 

But in the first nine months 2001, these so-called minority returns were up by 65 
percent to 56,683, according to the United Nations. That's only about nine percent of 
those waiting to go home, but still, it's a ``returnee boom,'' Feraget said. 

The main reasons: New laws require squatters to give up homes that aren't theirs; 
obstructive local officials are being removed; and U.N. police and NATO troops are 
visiting returnees to make sure they feel safe. 

These steps, along with an overall decline in violence and the simple passage of time, 
have made displaced Bosnians feel more secure, Feraget said. 

The Kragulj family came back from 20 miles away to find that their house in Dzevar, 
110 miles northwest of Sarajevo, had been shelled during the 1992-95 war, then 
dynamited by vengeful Muslims. 

``Friends gave us a pig and a few hens, and that's all we have,'' said Kragulj, who 
with his wife, Dusanka, barely gets by on a pension worth $45 a month. 

Although their town is now Muslim-controlled, their neighbors are friendly Serbs and 
Croats, also newly returned, and Kragulj says he'll never move again. 

``They looked sick all the time for six years when they were refugees,'' said the 
couple's 25-year-old son, Nenad. ``As soon as they came back to their ruins, my 
parents suddenly looked alive again. 

``There's no place like home.'' 

Another returnee, Petar Rajlic, lives alone in a hovel but has laid the foundation for 
a new house where the old one stood. 

``I don't have money to finish it and to bring my wife and daughter back,'' said 
Rajlic, 68, who earns the equivalent of $75 a month. ``Unfortunately, we are coming 
back on our own, without any help. But our only future is here, back on our own 
property.'' 

U.N. figures show that of the 1.8 million who were uprooted in the war, about 785,000 
have returned to their prewar homes. About 380,000 are abroad, leaving about 635,000 
people in Bosnia who are living in someone else's house and waiting to return to their 
own rightful homes. About half are Serbs, the United Nations says. 

Bosnians say more than 50,000 houses and apartments are needed to house returnees. But 
Slobodan Nagradic, a government minister for refugees, said the state doesn't have the 
cash and no longer can depend on donors. 

``Foreign donations are now going to Kosovo, Macedonia and elsewhere,'' he said. 

While most of the returnees are Serbs, the Bosnian Serb Republic is criticized for 
doing little to help Muslims and Croats return to their homes. 

The biggest hurdle is simply getting squatters to move out. Feraget, the U.N. refugees 
spokeswoman, said that if, for instance, the 24,000 Croatian Serbs in the republic 
would go back to Croatia, their homes could be reclaimed by the Muslims and Croats who 
own them. 

``Then... everyone would be back in their original property,'' she said. ``We would 
finally solve this refugee problem.'' 

AP-NY-12-02-01 1417EST

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